Khaleej Times

Born-again BlackBerry hopes to ride trucks to growth

- chief investment officer at Solaris Asset Management Alastair Sharp Reuters

Avisit to trucking firm Titanium Transporta­tion helps explain why BlackBerry’s stock is once again a darling in Canadian markets, having soared 70 per cent in two months.

Nestled in an industrial area some 50km north of Toronto, the trucker is an early adopter of a new BlackBerry fleet-tracking service known as Radar, which uses $400 boxes to collect and transmit informatio­n on movement, temperatur­e and physical contents of Titanium’s 1,300 truck trailers.

Efficiency gains tied to Radar should allow Titanium to get maximum utilisatio­n of its fleet, positionin­g it to cut the number of trailers by five per cent and also reduce labour costs, company executive Marilyn Daniel told Reuters.

“Time is everything in our world,” she said. “Being able to tell a driver where exactly a trailer is as opposed to having a driver search through a yard for sometimes hours has been a definite improvemen­t,” she says.

Radar is emblematic of BlackBerry chief executive John Chen’s strategy for turning around the Canadian icon, by steering the company away from consumer electronic­s and back to its roots of selling products to businesses.

Beyond Radar, BlackBerry is also betting on other types of software for industrial customers. It is leveraging its QNX subsidiary’s software foothold deep inside car infotainme­nt consoles to expand into self-driving technology, while promoting its cyber-security software and services to thwart increased threats from hacking.

BlackBerry’s stock rallied after it showed signs of progress in quarterly earnings results at the end of March, followed by news in April of a nearly $1 billion cash windfall from arbitratio­n with Qualcomm expected to fund future investment­s in growth. That comes in the face of an expected revenue decline to below $1 billion this year for the first time since 2004. At its smartphone peak, BlackBerry had annual sales of $20 billion.

Among the recent BlackBerry bulls are institutio­nal investors such as Nokota Management, which took a new position with almost 4.8 million shares in the first quarter, and Oppenheime­r Funds, which added 3.3 million more shares to its existing four million share stake, according to US securities filings.

Iridian Asset Management and Connor, Clark & Lunn Investment Management, two of BlackBerry’s biggest shareholde­rs, each raised their stakes by around a quarter as of the end of March.

The strategy is not without risks. BlackBerry faces challenges entering the telematics market, where analysts say rivals include Omnitracs, Teletrac Navman, Tomtom NV, Trimble and US telecommun­ications giant Verizon Communicat­ions. Verizon last year paid some $2.4 billion to buy GPS vehicle tracking firm Fleetmatic­s Group.

Radar “is not a unique and earthshatt­ering product”, said Nicholas Farhi, a partner at OC&C Strategy Consultant­s who advises companies on optimising logistics operations. That’s why some investors advise caution, saying it is too soon

It’s not the type of situation you can justify from a valuation standpoint. It’s all about hope and promise

to figure out how to properly value the new BlackBerry offerings.

“It’s not the type of situation you can justify from a valuation standpoint,” said Tim Ghriskey, chief investment officer at Solaris Asset Management, which exited the stock a decade ago, when BlackBerry phones were still dominant. “It is all about hope and promise.”

And yet hope and promise among BlackBerry investors were hard to come by in the aftermath of Apple and Samsung walking away with the consumer hand-held phone business. Since taking the company’s helm in 2013 to attempt a turnaround, Chen has turned to technology products used inside automobile­s and corporate cyber security services, in addition to targeting the gritty trucking industry with Radar. He also bolstered the company’s ability to manage rival devices in the workforce — still the single largest contributo­r to sales — with the purchase of rival Good Technology in 2015. And he outsourced production of handsets last year, meaning the company receives a cut from any devices sold by its partners rather than carrying the risk and revenue on its own books.

With Radar, BlackBerry enables customers to track trailers across country, and drivers can quickly locate vacant trailers scattered across vast parking lots. Previously, where drivers had to walk around those lots, banging on trailers in search of a hollow sound indicating it was empty.

BlackBerry charges $10 to $20 per month for every trailer connected to Radar, a product that an analyst at investment bank Macquarie says could play a pivotal role in a more than doubling of BlackBerry’s sales by 2020.

Sandeep Chennakesh­u, president of the BlackBerry Technology Solutions unit that oversees Radar, told that large package delivery firms and big carriers of lumber and home goods are among the more than 50 companies testing it. —

 ?? Reuters ?? At its smartphone peak, once-dominant BlackBerry had annual sales of $20 billion. — Tim Ghriskey,
Reuters At its smartphone peak, once-dominant BlackBerry had annual sales of $20 billion. — Tim Ghriskey,

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